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Private Aviation Charter Selling — 60-Min Training

👁 0 views📖 2,486 words⏱ 11 min read5/30/2026

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Private Aviation Charter Selling — 60-Min Training is a 60-minute sales sprint for jet-charter brokers and membership-program sellers moving $15K-$200K trips and jet-card programs to UHNW families, single-family offices, and corporate flight departments. The session locks down a safety-first discovery script (route + pax + day), category sizing (light / mid / super-mid / heavy / ULR), the ARGUS Platinum + Wyvern Wingman + IS-BAO Stage II vetting bar, transparent repositioning math, and a four-product framing (ad-hoc charter vs jet card vs membership vs fractional) so the prospect chooses with their eyes open.

Built on NBAA's Management Guide, ARGUS International and Wyvern PASS standards, and the Robb Report Private Aviation Survey, it ends with a signed charter agreement, deposit collected, and a 24-hour post-trip loyalty call calendared.


Section 1 — Why Charter Sells on Safety, Not Speed (5 min)

Open by killing the room's instinct to lead with "we can get you wheels-up in three hours." That is table stakes. NBAA data summarized in the 2025 Management Guide is unambiguous: UHNW buyers and corporate flight departments rank operator safety record as the #1 purchase driver, ahead of price, aircraft age, and onboard amenities.

The Robb Report Private Aviation Survey confirms the same hierarchy among ultra-affluent flyers.

Put the bar on the whiteboard:

End the segment by reading the ARGUS International line aloud: *"A rating audits the operator. A PASS report audits your trip."* Then write the broker's first rule on the board: Never quote a trip you can't safety-vet.


Section 2 — The Discovery Call: Route, Pax, Day (15 min)

Charter discovery is shorter than SaaS discovery — usually 8-12 minutes — but every question must earn its seat. Walk the room through the verbatim template; make every broker fill it out for a live inquiry sitting in their inbox right now.

Verbatim Charter Discovery Template (broker fills out on the first call):

  1. Route: [Departure FBO/airport] → [Arrival FBO/airport] — one-way / round-trip / multi-leg
  2. Day and flex: [Date(s)] — hard time / +/- 2 hours / +/- 1 day
  3. Pax count + bags: [# adults / # kids / # pets] + [# checked / # carry-on / # golf clubs or skis]
  4. Purpose: Leisure / business / medical / event — drives category and amenity needs
  5. Catering and ground: [Specific dietary] + [car service both ends — yes/no]
  6. Budget posture: "Best value" / "best aircraft regardless of price" / "specific cap of $___"
  7. Safety floor (READ ALOUD): "I only book operators rated ARGUS Gold-Plus or Platinum and Wyvern Wingman. Confirm that's your standard too?"
  8. Decision path: Who else signs off? (Spouse, EA, CFO, family-office principal)

Coach the room on the "flex unlocks price" rule — a 2-hour departure window or +/-1 day flex routinely cuts the quote 15-30% by surfacing empty-leg and repositioning matches. Paramount Business Jets and Jettly both publish that empty-leg discounts run up to 70% off retail when the routing aligns.

Show the bad discovery: *"What's your budget?"* That's not discovery, that's an anchor the buyer will resent. Lead with route and safety; price comes after category sizing.

flowchart TD A[Inbound Inquiry] --> B[Discovery Call: 8-12 Min] B --> C{Route + Pax + Day Captured?} C -->|No| D[Stop: Re-Qualify, Do Not Quote] C -->|Yes| E[Size the Category: Light/Mid/Super-Mid/Heavy/ULR] E --> F[Pull 3 ARGUS+Wyvern-Rated Options] F --> G[Send Quote with Safety Ratings Visible] G --> H[Vetting Call: Walk Through PASS Report] H --> I[Charter Agreement + 50% Deposit] I --> J[Trip Sheet, Catering, Ground Locked T-48h] J --> K[Post-Trip Call Within 24 Hours]

Section 3 — Category Sizing and the Safety-First Frame (10 min)

Buyers don't speak in tail numbers. Translate. Memorize the five categories and what they buy:

What to NEVER say in front of the buyer (read aloud, slowly):

Then frame the four products on the board so the buyer sees the full menu before you steer them: ad-hoc charter (pay per trip, full flexibility, no commitment), jet card (25-100 prepaid hours at locked hourly rate, guaranteed availability with callout windows), membership (annual fee + per-hour, often capped-rate categories — think Wheels Up, Sentient Jet), and fractional ownership (1/16th to 1/2 share, monthly management fee plus occupied hourly — NetJets, Flexjet).

The NBAA Rules of Thumb crossover: under 25 hrs/yr → ad-hoc; 25-75 hrs → jet card; 75-200 hrs → fractional begins to win.


Section 4 — Pricing Transparency and the Repositioning Conversation (10 min)

The fastest way to lose a charter buyer's trust is an opaque markup. The fastest way to keep them for life is to show the build-up. Use the verbatim quote-walk script.

Verbatim Quote-Walk Script (broker on the phone, screen-shared invoice):

Broker: "I'm going to walk you through every line on this quote so there are no surprises. Top to bottom."

Broker: "Aircraft hourly: Challenger 350, 4.2 flight hours at $9,200/hr = $38,640. That's the operator's published wet rate — fuel included."

Broker: "Repositioning: the aircraft is based in Teterboro, your pickup is Aspen. The empty leg back to base after drop-off is 4.0 hours at $9,200 — $36,800. I tried to match an empty-leg return today; nothing aligned. If you're flexible on the date by 48 hours I can re-shop it."

Broker: "FET (Federal Excise Tax): 7.5% on the transportation portion — $5,658."

Broker: "Crew per diem, landing, ramp, and handling at Aspen — itemized here — $2,400."

Broker: "Catering at your request — $650. Ground transport on both ends — $1,100."

Broker: "My brokerage fee is built into the aircraft hourly at a transparent 8%, disclosed here in writing. No opaque markup, no operator kickback."

Broker: "Total: $85,248. Charter agreement is a 6-page document, deposit is 50% to confirm, balance T-72 hours before departure. PASS report on your exact tail and crew lands in your inbox T-24."

Do NOT:


Section 5 — The Membership vs Ad-Hoc vs Jet-Card vs Fractional Math (15 min)

This is where 80% of brokers leave money on the table — they sell the trip in front of them and never expand to the program. Build the decision tree on the whiteboard.

flowchart TD A[How Many Hours/Year?] --> B{Under 25 Hours?} B -->|Yes| C[Ad-Hoc Charter Only] B -->|No| D{25-75 Hours?} D -->|Yes| E[Jet Card: Locked Hourly, Callout 24-72h] D -->|No| F{75-200 Hours?} F -->|Yes| G[Fractional 1/16 to 1/8 Share] F -->|No| H[Whole Aircraft Ownership] E --> I[Compare 3 Cards: Jet Linx, Sentient, NetJets Marquis] G --> J[Compare NetJets vs Flexjet vs Airshare] C --> K[Annual Spend < $200K Sweet Spot]

The math (for a buyer flying ~50 hours/year, super-midsize category):

Common buyer objections (rehearse the comebacks):

Force the comparison on paper. Pull the buyer's last 12 months of trips, drop them into a side-by-side, and let the numbers speak. CPA Practice Advisor and NBAA both publish templates; build your own in Excel and own the artifact.


Section 6 — Charter Agreement, Deposit, and the Post-Trip Loyalty Close (5 min)

Each trip closes the same way. Make it muscle memory:

The close is the post-trip call: 24 hours after wheels-down, you call (not text, not email) and ask three questions: *Did the crew meet your standard? Was the aircraft as expected? What would you change next time?* Log every answer in the CRM.

Robb Report's survey shows 73% of UHNW flyers stay with the broker who called after the trip; only 22% stay with the broker who didn't.

Close the room by reading NBAA's principle aloud: *"In private aviation, the sale is the trip after this one."* Then send each broker out with two commitments: one inbound inquiry quoted using the new template today, and one past client called for a post-trip debrief by EOD Friday.


FAQ

Q1: What if my operator only has ARGUS Gold, not Platinum — is that a deal-breaker? A: For UHNW leisure, ARGUS Gold + IS-BAO Stage II is acceptable for short-haul light/mid trips if you also pull a Wyvern PASS on the specific tail and crew. For international, medical, or family-with-children trips, hold the line at Platinum or Wingman.

Q2: How do I handle a buyer who wants to use a non-vetted operator a friend recommended? A: Offer to vet the operator yourself in 24 hours. If they don't pass ARGUS/Wyvern/IS-BAO, write a short memo explaining what's missing and let the buyer decide. Document everything. Your reputation lives in the paper trail.

Q3: When does it make sense to push fractional over jet card? A: At 75+ hrs/yr with predictable routes, fractional wins on guaranteed availability and tax depreciation (consult the buyer's CPA on bonus depreciation per current IRS rules). Under 75 hrs, jet card almost always wins on flexibility and cash efficiency.

Q4: How do I price empty legs without burning my margin? A: Empty legs are inventory clearance for the operator — quote them at 40-70% off retail per Paramount Business Jets and Jettly benchmarks. Take a flat $1,500-$3,000 broker fee, not a percentage. Volume of bookings, not margin per booking.

Q5: What's the right cancellation policy to write into my agreement? A: Industry standard per Air Charter Association is: full refund T-72 hours, 50% T-24 to T-72, 100% inside 24 hours. Always mirror the operator's policy back to back so you're never out of pocket on a buyer cancel.

Q6: How do I handle the "I want to compare 3 quotes" buyer without becoming a quote factory? A: Quote two options, not three — a "best value" and a "best aircraft" — both ARGUS/Wyvern-rated. Tell the buyer: *"I'm not going to send a third option I wouldn't fly my own family on."* That sentence converts more than any discount.


Sources

  1. National Business Aviation Association (NBAA), *Management Guide* and *Rules of Thumb for Business Aircraft Ownership*, nbaa.org, 2025 editions.
  2. ARGUS International, *CHEQ Operator Rating System and PRISM Safety Standards*, argus.aero, 2025.
  3. Wyvern Ltd., *Wingman Certified Standard and PASS (Pilot and Aircraft Safety Survey) Methodology*, wyvernltd.com, 2025.
  4. International Business Aviation Council (IBAC), *IS-BAO (International Standard for Business Aircraft Operations) Stages I-III*, ibac.org, 2024-2025 protocol.
  5. Robb Report, *Private Aviation Survey* and annual *Best of the Best Private Jets* reports, robbreport.com, 2024-2025.
  6. Forbes, *Private Aviation Reports* and Doug Gollan's *Private Jet Card Comparisons* coverage, forbes.com, 2024-2025.
  7. Air Charter Association, *Code of Conduct and Broker Standards*, theaircharterassociation.com, 2024.
  8. Conklin & de Decker (a JSSI company), *Aircraft Operating Cost and Performance Comparisons*, conklindd.com, 2025 database.
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